Authors
Stefan R Schweinberger, Christoph Casper, Nadine Hauthal, Jürgen M Kaufmann, Hideki Kawahara, Nadine Kloth, David MC Robertson, Adrian P Simpson, Romi Zäske
Publication date
2008/5/6
Journal
Current Biology
Volume
18
Issue
9
Pages
684-688
Publisher
Cell Press
Description
Perceptual aftereffects following adaptation to simple stimulus attributes (e.g., motion, color) have been studied for hundreds of years. A striking recent discovery was that adaptation also elicits contrastive aftereffects in visual perception of complex stimuli and faces [1–6]. Here, we show for the first time that adaptation to nonlinguistic information in voices elicits systematic auditory aftereffects. Prior adaptation to male voices causes a voice to be perceived as more female (and vice versa), and these auditory aftereffects were measurable even minutes after adaptation. By contrast, crossmodal adaptation effects were absent, both when male or female first names and when silently articulating male or female faces were used as adaptors. When sinusoidal tones (with frequencies matched to male and female voice fundamental frequencies) were used as adaptors, no aftereffects on voice perception were observed. This …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
SR Schweinberger, C Casper, N Hauthal… - Current Biology, 2008